’ eas ‘ e . —— P CIAL PROVINCTAL Ltt j oRROW'S z te . ! -TIDES— ig Viv 3 ‘ &s . a be ex yet 1952 ' & a : ee NORTHERN AND CENTRAL BRITISH COLUMBIA’s NEWSPAPER : : 88 feet Published at Canada’s Most Strategic Pacific Port—’P ince Rupert, the Key to the Great Northwest” 1 feet VOL. XILI, No. 236 aaa ML. LA, N PRINCE RUPERT, B.C., TUESDAY. OCTOBER 7, 1952 " PRICE FIVE CENTS af - Yanks Win World Series “sed by City Group | an $ in or r les “ ymber of Commerce Endorses Wi ly 4 2 ( d Thrill Dotiti Ch Byl age a of wi tn Prince it : row : er . ‘ f Commeree has endorsed a peti- . . ° * oy Cone Seat nae a. Great Batting, Pitching % 28 Mossadegh cence ee _ thwarts Dodger Threats | | @ppeal of the Canadian National Institute for the Blind to ast date total $847 By The Canadian Press ting ay 0 ut This, added to a total of «: For Payment TEHRAN © A highly-placed Officials of the Prince Ru lag Saturday brings to $1,328 the amount collected in the drive to reach the quota of $2,000 set for this city Citizens to mail donations in appeal letters sent to them $581.35 received in the tag day BROOKLYN. ann hae pert CNIB branch today urged New York Yankees won | their fourth straight World Series this afternoon by defeating the Brooklyn Dodgers 4-2 in a thrill-packed | Seventh game. in the latter part of September. : i government source predicted to- They said that while the tag day receipts were above |_ 4 mighty home run by Mickey By Labor Minister ‘ay ‘that Premier Mohammed las! year's contributions by the publie are lagging ee cr nl te someaned ae Mossadegh will not reject the ee ™ 7 ay " forts of three relief pitchers en- ° . new British and American notes : abled the Yanks to take the ser- B C Fishi m the British-Iranian oi] dis- | les finale ots ‘ pute, but said he will insist on “ f est C uNnC e | Mantle’s homer, a tremendous ne M I payment of $49,000,000 in the dis- |Swat over the screen atop the St k Ma sl j “ puted oll royaities as a prelimin- | tight field wuil, thrilled the ri e y a ary condition to a settlement oe A * ° eevee of a ne 4 = + ie Mossadegh talked over the ot} | ' ainst eS $ -ankees ahea y E d Soon a ¥ question for three hours today| aA g ice a eee Le n a. with Shah Mohammed Reza | “Al . toot ac belted a homer as wis SEs create tae Sane er _ 12,000 Communists Hit at West "",,,. .... «. work af Alte | peetnetng ty eee eo premier against any “drastic , | Sevedian Yes ht rn . eae ‘ action at this time 2 2 ° > i We Rase and fi- shortly, through direct “4 é on ot sn | pe sines in Hand-to-Hand Fighting | i'm Kum'm cnmung |S gPess an 2 Bamber that the by Mossadegh's threat to break dip- rm cul ‘ - ‘i st aie big difference in Wicks, : bee endorsed by the Liomatic relations With Detter ry SEOUL (CP)—More than 12,000 Communist} pen dhamggasomey ois we ee sei a t mm te 7 anc any enenwite _— ee ° 1 . sos - . a ; . a ir y, halrman ea? oe Mameemee troops attacked allied positions across two-thirds of) time after time the Dodgers,| tne inative Brothachoed of Bt. 0 r ‘ s i , ay! haven't won a world series fay construction CCF Speaker PRISONERS RIOT - Preparing to attack rioters at Oakalla | the Korean battle front last night and early today i toe sateen on : piiotive stanenittes, said - of Fee Prison near Vancouver are prison guards and R.C.M.P officers, | jn biggest co-ordinated operation in months. lade rtake the front-running| jer a hopes oe % Cha es Socreds One guard is carrying a tear gas pellet holder while the rest | In greatest of all attacks, 4, oy | Yanks. troubles might be ironed out “4 rg |; &re getting a fire hose ready, The biggest jail riot in British | Chinese Reds assaulted two hills oe 7 . They did it twice, but man- shortly.” . . | Columbia's history came to a soggy finish when rioters were | northwest of Chorwon on the ager Casey Stengel’s constantly A 10-man delegation of the = With Fascism | Subdued by water and tear gas. The riot, which caused damage | western front after opening the changing corps of moundsmen Brotherhood, led by Dr. Kelly ad estimated at thousands of dollars, started when prisoners pro- | floodgates of the reservoir to the || 7, shut om oe aa and William Scow, president, os PRINCE GEORGE, BC | tested alleged overcrowding (CP PHOTO) | north | innings met the minister for more than hat CCF plans for provincial and ‘ pai | Water in the river coursing||. eee ae one hour. “Vee federal elections were mapped .» te ° ardund two hills mounted only, |New York. 000 111 100-4 10 @ ome here during a week-end regional A | H lt C T twO,feet, but the Chinese storm- pred. K oan oe : * i conference if ines a S ! “* errace ed up slopes and fought it out | ‘Lenak Re ao ‘ Arm Retires : es Ane pe oe od . P SUR shooes sud soaaies eo }) (7), Kuzava (7) and Beer: Jen y ‘i * * ed the two-day meeting closed Ss F W te Months Dae, 5 Bi rn > Be ), Erskine me ; a \o. the press. N6 information. an | ervice or in i inte the deren ee ag ia) ald Caiman eee y Head te a AMA | ¢ 7 ” were given aut S } "ihc eevpared aaa tamsed Canadian Pacific Airlines serv-; tered on the route at this time. 9; four minor hills in the ex- Seines “a + y of various vice between Prince Rupert and! of the year, said company of- treme west e . aie Po can aaa . eg a be suspended for) ficials. Only four of the sched-| At the same time. the Reds Li era S Win ermanen "ts oon opening address Satur- the winter months, effective! uled thrice weekly flights were | pinched at the U.S. marine line : ; . ht prank Snowsell, MLA. for Oct. 13 ;compieted during the month of | at 13 points on the extreme OTTAWA (P)—The defence Bal Saan a rty organizer for| This move is made necessary| September, due to adverse western front and two major | b department said today that = i ae — Be uy} the inek at navigational aids| Weather conditions assaults hit strongpoints on the 7 n ue ec . Alan B. Connelly, former Peopie of British Columbia’ for instrument flying during the Tt is understood that the De- oe a + Old —_— is ee : a oe, | isu n of ng i wr yl are waking up to the fact that) bad weather which J8 eficoun-/ partment, of Transport have as- Near y “i .IN) ACTION — Lt.- B Elect ¥ _} #lon in Tokyo, as gone on’ 1 I k {| they have elected a reactionary | re sighed Terrace a top priority for: thrown irito each action. ek oe L/ Quinn, 20-year- | y- ion » {Sj tirement leave in line with thé ea u ant the} government with Pastist tenden- the iistallation of the equip- Later reports said that & veteran of North Atlantic ; jatmy policy retiring senior of- : ® can ‘ ion leles. They are recognizing that arson Nai ment necessary for consistent) pig push by 15,000 Chinese naval action during the Sec- | MONTREAL @—Liberal fieers “when there is no futther a n if|the CCF offers the only alter- }operation of air service in the Communists, which overran | ond world ‘War. has been re- | didates won federal by-elections suitable employment for them to! native to capitalist exploitation.” House leader area seven allied hill positions in ported killed in action in te the Oanhetet mae Tehn ‘and in the service.’ * Snowsell charged that the So- ‘When such an installation is_ the first onset, early today Korea. Former staff officer | ings = «= a ~ob, The defence department is- ial Credit government under ‘ompleted, CPA will resume; reached defences of one or at Prince Rupert, BC. he Po lew-t _—- we sued an official statement Premier W. A. C. Bennett has - service between these points,| two heights guarding the road | was killed when the Canadian | Both seats were traditionally prompted by reports that the ‘ : Liberal and candidates won eas- irtailled essential expenditure and also give consideration to; to Seoul. destroyer Iroquois was hit by - With cand cate t 44-year-old Calgary engineer spon public works expansion and VICTORIA «P) Ernest C./an improved schedule,” said of- Confused reports from the! g Communist shore battery len tio a a “= A alling had left the service eh maintenance Carson, Lillooet rancher and/ ficiais front some 50 miles from Seoul} while on patrol duty off the | ‘He voting was light, The statement was issued af- ; 4 Other speakers included Prank former provincial public works stein ateippieaaieetiibiat said allied counter-attacks were|} Korean coast. His widow’ and | In Outremont-St. Jean, Rom-| ter inquiries reached head- 4 Caider, MLA, Atlin; George Hills minister, has been named leader trying to seal off the breach. four-year-old son live in Hal- | uald Bourgue built up a two-to- quarters on reports that Brig. MLA, Prince Rupert; Raold Dah of the four-man Progressive —WEATHER— It is described as the biggest! ifax. (CP from National De- “one vote lead over his nearest Connelly’s retirement was as- len of Peace River northern or Conservative block in the Pro- )-ordinated Communist attack) fence) Opponesss, Claude Noolin, *~ sociated with the assignment of ganizer; and William Irvine, for-| + ia) Legislature. it was an-| * Synopsis ‘ in Korea in at least a year. gressive Conservative and left] Canadian forces to guard pris- mer Member of Parliament for |"! /eeish : a “ ° three other candidates far in oners of war on Koje Island. Co ee rer nounced here today A series of weak disturbance is 3 Killed in tis ny ‘ “i that ‘ Cariboo Mr. Carson's appointment as bringing rain to the north coast | " | . iS a ¥ a> iia aie te ta = Rye ey ig house leader for the Progressive | . 1g variable cloud to the north- t T i Plane Crash - ae ret soaP ek , santana ot. cuanae seneh at a cee. Ny . Conservatives may foreshadow | or. interior The southern half a er ax pe yeti ae n +l So aes tae ‘+ Railways his election next week @8 Pro-/of the province remains cleat PHILADELPHIA © Three} Vuremon S men aneke ame fa vincial party leader although there are extensive fog men were killed and three others | _In Richelieu-Verchers, Lucien ae ene Co oe The party's present leader, patches along the coast which xp 0 es, injured early today when a| Cardin stepped into an impres- te in aes os nnounces Herbert Anscomb, will step aside) wij linger until mid morning United States Air Force C-47/Sive four-to-one lead over Al- part ee when the Tories hold their gen- Temperatures will continue well * lane crashed in a swamp near | beric Tremblay, Pgperessive Con-| Canadian Company to Koje to i | ral mee z Oct. 18 Vv ) for the season P a airport. | Servative and his only opponent. help put down the prisoner of ° * ew Vivision eral meeting above normal a northeast Philadelphia airport. | : = coi ea sncenincaanieaaeiit In the interior however, there The plane was en route from | ~— is tomer war riots. r : s has been ground frost in the VANCOUVER ® — A 22-foot| Niagara Falls. N.¥., to Mitchell | the House : : ‘COUVER ® — Canadiar inte s , sei i ig IRON SOURCE : VANCOL VER 2 sar _ CNR Awarded early morning at many points | . tor tas exploded “into a mil-| Field, Long Island, N.Y. | Liberals 184, Progressive Con Sinaia “apes aueets : ational Ratiways : ' and frost is expected again to- | * -es” at Horseshoe Bay, a} A spokesman said the plane|servatives 49, CCF 13, Social : ae Eee Leneeeree er ‘Oscar For night. Indications are that the ee ‘anak 12 miine west ‘of was unable to get down at Mit- Credit 10, Independent-Liberal] per cent of the United a : ing division, it was announcec 7 weather picture will continue | Sum a Sneteenae chell Field use of weather|two, Independent four. Total] iron ore, mostly from open-p' i yearereay ffic | Prize Report |with little change for another |” But its pilot Stan Hurrell and | conditions. | 262 mines. ; ireater rol ‘a tre ° S | a ‘ cupachie is tee as the ial. NEW YORK.- The Canadian| forty-eight ; esnal | Wo passengers, J. S. Pawson and ‘eae ‘ ‘NR. f Second Nar-| National Railways has won the) = - ;his brother Phillip escaped in- NS nue SO me ONE GS Pagorn t of |bronze “Oscar of Industry” for| South portion clear today and | jury C/ at rater ‘son a cto ic its 1951 annual report | Wednesday, Fog patches in the As the deck sank under them , i big ae rey ne - “te A total of 5,000 annual reports; morning both days. Not much they grabbed lifebelts and though S . - oe he north phere of dhore were entered in this year’s In-|change in temperature. Light| stunned, managed to swim 300 p t Action t Ritiine nent a lternational competition spon-| winds. Low tonight and high to- yards through the chilly waters Wor toppage on ig way romp $ Rchers’ py | ae ne Hew division will " oc n{sored by the “Financial World,”| morrow at Port Hardy, Sandspit of Howe Sound to shore. chi “tration, | as Vancouver Terminal miviaton | : | board of|/and Prince Rupert 40 and 58 “That boat blew into million oe a ‘ be fan’ W8S\and a specially-selected super- |e ee rahee Ge Ga report as| eee ee )pleces,” said Hurrell, “when we) Halting of work on the last) bring in a report as soon beget Se ccs a ro Bes Save not as lee ee SO ined in ee ae SKY PIONEER looked around later all we could | portion of a $200,000 construc- | ible. in| of the Legisiature for Prince Mt youre’ 8d- | charge ion| The trophy will be presented} First man to make @ balloon | find Was my driver's seat.” tion job on Highway 16 brought} President a cone ‘. in the BC. : Neottes of oe’ |. Formation of the new division | . ial awards banquet| ascent was Jean Francois de| What caused the explosion 1s| prompt action from two Prince | bringing up the matter the at-| Rupert ae oe me we e ithe , . in Montreal by) at the annual awards ltention of members, said: ment, said a fr nue ae oo ” | here on October a8. Rosier on Oct. 15, 1788. not known. Rupert organizations. lire woe Sane eles 22 0 er here, when the . Sn ee Coreen. sas 2s Sg ee eee ee Se e eS The Chamber of Commerce, at) was allocated for our northern} contract is for almost $200,000 ; re Tj G P k a meeting last we eee to | roads this year. Now we are| and work is stoppin befor ¢ ; nd a telegram to orks | for money is even = red of Flying Saucers Gen. Fearnes ions Sidie maieeet cae told $50,000 is not available for| the budgetted of Dechii PC reasons for the stoppage. | He said he did not know| Bob McKay said “it’s a matter ! ° mes The move followed by Only 8/ Whether the $50,000 Was 02 good common sense to con- s h il Stor “ : tow hours © telephone call by | siverted to another section tinue the project now. The equip- Q ed onster ri Nomination Art Murray, unsuccessful Social) the highway but asked for mem-|ment is there and the public sat (4 it had eye Suddenly the creature sank Credit candidate in Ha ae bers’ views. works department should be told ng OP) — Bore . “1 thought it had one a M re § election, to Peer V, ynter, the reminded mem-|to it finished. Motles? a wc epidee antitieee atalinn| about the size of the window |straight down, “leaving a boil G ‘Lien oe party's provincial organizer in wie Ga wees the Prince Ru-j “It will cost thousands of dol- ast, mk to the old-| up out of the water about four) on a diver’s — eee about the size of my boat.” amine Psat ee tee Vancouver, asking him to inquire | pert_Galloway Rapids Bridge | lars more i complete it the cg » lantasy like | feet.” man said, “His mou . 41 feet long.|*‘ tshi into the situation. tion of the hishwa be- | eq taken away. A a mon. ce, | feet » | Armstrong’s boat is ee g itish lum’ ressive portion e highway was juipme Mat to the yarn?|} Armstrong said he throttled] bit alt, about fe ie — | the Sidi dae bie yee. pate San. Progress Mr. Paynter said he would 60| ing constructed the — ca “nt Scene trong, y,, 2° Of| down and started to circle, clos-| As he circled, d him. The|senger, Orrel Reed jr., saw the) Gen, Pearkes, Member of Par-|to Victoria imiiediately S-\ called for an expenditure Weed & DaoCiay. that his be tn’ °teraniing 4 t 25 yards. jand the eye followe corte " f -|cuss the matter with Mr. Gag-/ $934 000 “but instead of announced yesterday M fishing, ;'ng in to abou yards. | od, Armstrong said, | tps toG;and’ agreed as to the |i#ment fer Nanaimo told a con } , had been advised to f Y Sea) He described the thing as a|head pivoted, thing, : & ~~ | stituency meeting Saturday: lardi. |when they found there Wasn’t | company ten \ mt | nee Seeee eas ete eens | eS. Woes ee p Folio creature's deseription with one “".7 have been too long in fed-| The Chamber also endorsed a| enough money, work continued a ae canine tion ob pecause, *% B fihing [x¢,*88| head about four feet thick, hard| thick that 7 saan He was|€xception: Réed thought it had! eral affairs to give serious|move to have its highway com-/and the higt.way cost $700,000— = ao : * 4 Coup, ate on/and horney on the outside and — aaah tha length. |two eyes, thought to the BC. Proposal.” | mittee probe the situation andj almost three times as much as|o’ ' — ' miles! encrusted with barnacles junadle tO CHlknne * ; q